“Nevertheless when it shall turn to the Lord, the vail shall be taken away. Now the Lord is that Spirit; and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is liberty.”
Sunday, February 26, 2023
Lost Crusader #175 Liberty
Saturday, February 25, 2023
Know Jack #384 The Right to Write
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.”
Sunday, February 19, 2023
Lost Crusader #174 Believers and Disciples
“Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets. Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat: because strait is the gate and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life and few there be that find it.”
Jesus Christ
Christians have always known the answer to the age-old question,
“what is the meaning of life?”. If we refuse to enter into discussions of
philosophy, metaphysics, and science to explain our existence, it is with good
cause. We have left behind discovery and moved on to testing, applying, and evaluating
the answer. We have ceased being mere believers (or seekers for you modern folks)
and have become disciples.
I am not playing at
semantics nor splitting hairs when I say the difference between the two is the
difference between life and death. I meet many people within and without churches
who put a great deal of stock in the fact that they believe in God, or a god. I
believe it and have no doubt that they are absolutely sincere. I think it is necessary
to abandon logic and reason to not believe in God.
The problem for those who say they believe in God is similar
to the one people face who say they are spiritual and not religious—it doesn’t
really mean anything or get you anywhere. We are born spiritual beings and no
matter how you conceptualize man’s origin, we are created beings, if no other
reason than we are not self-existent.
However, for the most succinct demonstration of the fallacy
of belief in God as a means of justification for human imperfection, we look to
James who says, “Thou believest that there is one God; thou doest well: the
devils also believe, and tremble”. Perhaps you don’t believe in a real devil.
That would help explain why you are content to say, “I believe” and leave it
there.
Belief will neither usher you into a relationship with God
nor completely exclude you. He that comes to God must believe that He
is. You may be a believer and not be a disciple. You cannot be a disciple
without being a believer. The difference is that a disciple accepts the grace
and forgiveness of God and then sets about working out the transformation that God
wills for their life. Faith without the works that demonstrate it is dead.
Christianity isn’t something people do on Sunday. It’s not a
list of rules, doctrines, and creeds—it is a way of life. Or in Jesus words, The
Way, of life. It is a life of study, service, reflection, and fidelity. You
must work out the particulars of your own salvation, but you will not have to
do it alone. The Spirit of God will guide you when you’re lost, reprove you
when you’re wrong, and exhort you onward when you are right. Peace with God and
everlasting life are offered to everyone, but it’s not for everyone. It is for
those willing to take up a cross and follow Jesus.
Maranatha
Saturday, February 18, 2023
Know Jack #383 By Faith
“Why are ye so fearful? How is it ye have no faith?”
Sunday, February 12, 2023
Lost Crusader #173 Elements of Faith
“Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.”
Hebrews 11:1
The scripture above is a wonderful description of faith, but
it does not define faith or tell us how faith works in giving substance to the
things we hope for or provide evidence of the unseen. There is a good reason
for this. The working of faith is, of necessity, more involved than merely describing
it. An airplane is easy to identify. It is much more difficult to describe the
aerodynamics that keep it in the air.
There are three components or dimensions to Christian faith.
I will endeavor to describe them. However, like most things related to
Christianity, telling you about them is not as difficult as putting them into
practice.
The first component of faith is hearing. As Paul told the
Romans, “So then faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God”.
Before a person can come to a conclusion, they must begin with a hypothesis.
Jesus often called for those who had an ear, to hear Him. He
was not speaking about the wing-like things on the side of our heads. He was
speaking of a willingness to listen. Discarding (or accepting) an idea based
solely on its source is foolishness. As the old saying goes, even a broken
clock is right twice a day. The Bible urges us to be swift to hear, but slow to
speak.
Now hearing is just that—hearing. It does not mean to unquestioningly
accept as true the words you have heard. Not the words from friends, not the
words from pulpits, not even the words in your Bible. The words we hear are
meant to be examined, questioned, and tested in order to evaluate their
veracity. The scripture invites hearers to “taste and see”, and to “try Me now
in this”. That is, to experiment. God is not afraid to be put to the test
provided the conclusion has not already been decided in the experimenter’s
mind.
Faith is an action, not an idea. That is why James said that
faith without works—the resultant actions—is dead by itself. He challenged
those who said they had faith to demonstrate it in their lives without actions (
of course, they couldn’t.). He said he would show the world his own faith by
what he was motivated by faith to do.
Hypothesis. Test. Are these steps sounding familiar?
The next step is to evaluate the results. Did acting on the
words you heard produce positive results? The result of faith at work is to
produce the fruit of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, gentleness, goodness, faith,
meekness and temperance in the life of the person conducting the test.
One important note must be considered. Fruit does not grow
overnight except in the most miraculous cases. Babies don’t learn to walk
without falling down. Nurtured, fruit does grow, and babies do learn to walk.
In the same way, faith, soundly practiced, will produce spiritual fruit and a
spiritual walk.
Maranatha
Saturday, February 11, 2023
Know Jack #382 What a Wonderful World
I was preparing for an appearance on a podcast recently. I knew the podcaster’s first question was going to be “What got you interested in the paranormal/spiritual world?” Except with me, he didn’t add the /spiritual part. That was just God looking out for me. I suspect that his listeners would have been turned off by my answer. So, of course, I’m going to answer both parts right here where I am the only one held accountable for my answer.
What got me interested in the paranormal/spiritual world.
The bottom line is simple—life. You see people don’t really have an option
about it. I’ll address the paranormal first. Now, Mr. Webster says that
paranormal and supernatural are synonymous. I disagree, but they can be treated
the same way here. Neither is scientifically explainable—his definition with
which I do agree.
I have found that when speaking about human beings the terms
“always” and “never” can pretty much be ruled out. There are always exceptions.
People dead for a half hour come back while the doctor is making out the death
certificate. Perfectly healthy people drop dead. I’ve had nurse aides come to
the nurses’ station in shock after seeing a phantom little boy in one of the
rooms. Then there are my own encounters with angels and demons for which
science has no explanation.
One reason for this is that there are many questions the scientific method cannot answer. Science is simply not equipped to answer them.
Because there are scientifically unanswerable questions, the
paranormal/supernatural are not really a deviation from what we call the
“normal” universe.
Every time I pick up a book, I suspend disbelief and as much
opinion as possible and let the author show me the story. The best authors
leave me some blanks to fill in with my imagination. I have had this affliction
since childhood. I won’t say everybody has it to some degree because of that
always/never principle.
Now for the spiritual part. If you read my blogs, some of
this will be old hat. Spirituality is not a choice people make. Humans are made
up of body, soul, and spirit. They may deny the existence of or choose to alter
body parts they were born with, but the possession of a spirit is not an
option.
So much for boasts of the “spiritual, but not religious”
folks. Those they call hypocrites are just as spiritual as they are. The
religious aspect I used to equally devalue, but I have discovered people who
may not be religious. Of course, being religious in the true sense of the word
has nothing to do with churches.
Religion is a focused disciple. A person can be religious
about their diet. In fact some nutritional gurus I’ve heard sound like tent
revival preachers. I have met Drill Sergeants who were very religious on a wide
variety of subjects as well as being evangelical in their own way. I’m
religious about my morning coffee.
I have found that there do exist people who have no focus,
who blow with every wind of TV “news”, Facebook trend, or social influencer. I
suppose I could say that they are religious about their social media, but I
doubt they are that grounded. Ironically, these same folks swallow whole
everything they hear while proclaiming that characteristic the sole purview of
Christianity. I don’t mind that. You can say what you like about my faith. I
just find it interesting.
We are spiritual born into a world where miracles and the
unexplained happen every day. Being interested in that world doesn’t make me
strange (there are plenty of other things that do that). It simply makes me
alive and having a good time doing it.
Sunday, February 5, 2023
Lost Crusader # 172 This Little Light of Mine
“Every prudent man acts with knowledge, but a fool lays open his folly.”
Proverbs 13:16
I once read a bit of homespun wisdom that I have taken to
heart when speaking about my faith. This homely bon mot goes like this,
“If you throw a rock into a pack of dogs, the one which yelps the loudest is
the one you hit”. No one makes more noise than the person working desperately
to deny that which they know to be true.
Jesus pronounced as blessed the faith which produces attacks
of unfounded reviling. “Rejoice and be exceeding glad,” was His advice when
such attacks occur. And why not? It’s just the yelping of wounded dogs that
can’t help their instinctive reaction.
I think Christians should live right out in the open without
apology for what we believe. Compromise is not Jesus’ way. Read the gospels and
see if it is not so. In the same vein, neither do I believe that we should try
to persuade or pressure people. We are to be lights in the dark. A lamp offers
light while chasing no one.
That said, a lighted lamp must look different from the
darkness that surrounds it. I don’t know if there ever was a day where, despite
the call for inclusion and diversity, that looking and believing differently
was so maligned. The church has gotten the message and labors to conform to the
expectations of the society that surrounds it.
This ought not to be. That’s not just my opinion. The
scripture clearly states we are not to be conformed to this world, but be
transformed by a renewing of our minds. This applies to us as individuals as
well as in groups. The scripture also says that not all men have this
knowledge. That is simply a statement of fact. It neither recommends nor
condemns. That is for individual souls to work out to their own blessing or
cursing as free will dictates.
Do not mistake what I am saying here. There is a way that
seems right though the ends thereof are death. The prudent person knows this
and applies themselves to investigation. The fool assumes he must be correct in
“his” truth and plunges ahead to whatsoever he conjures in his heart.
The saint and the sinner are both driven by desire. The
object of that desire determines the quality of their life over (and beyond)
time. Those who deem themselves worthy of world celebration unashamedly lay
open their folly seeking approval. The prudent have found their place in the
Creation and have no need of acclamation or earthly approval.
Maranatha
Saturday, February 4, 2023
Know Jack #381 From the Little Reader, the Mighty Author Grows
If you don't have the time to read, you don't have the time or the tools to write.
Stephen King
Bill Cosby, before his name became anathema, released a
hilarious album entitled, I Started Out as a Child. (Perhaps that’s a
warning to us all about the nature of humanity.) This post isn’t about him, his
triumphs or his sins. It’s about beginnings. Like certain body parts, (I was
thinking navels) we all have one. The overwhelming majority of writers I know began
reading as children and will probably die in old age with a list of books they
still want to read.
When I say that, I mean from the moment they learned to
read, they read everything they could lay their hands on. I remember reading
cereal boxes. I read in the same fashion my grandchildren played video games.
The library was like a shrine—a portal to heaven, or at least to distant
worlds.
People have told me that I have a gift for writing. God
gives gifts as He wills, so maybe that is true in some cosmic sense. However, if
that is so, it first manifested in a love of reading. Reading hundreds
of books didn’t give me a writing voice. It taught me that writers have a unique
voice. It also taught me characters have voices when they talk you should
listen.
I had all the English classes that taught grammar,
sentence/paragraph structure, themes, and vocabulary that everyone else took.
Reading showed me how all those diagrams worked to create pictures with words.
If I have a natural gift, it was dormant until watered by reading.
I know writers who say they don’t read so as not to taint
their originality and voice. Did you notice the quote by Stephen King that
started the blog? Okay, that’s all I got to say about that.
So, what did I read? Here’s my top-ten influencers list.
These books have structured my thinking and my take on the universe.
The Bible—the words I read changed my life and still
influence my voice. Does anybody else think in King James?
Mere Christianity—the two facts that determine all
clear thinking in the universe.
Collected Works of E.A. Poe—specifically The Tell Tale
Heart and Annabelle Lee. The power of words that make you see.
The Abolition of Man—the insidious evil within modern
education.
Foxe’s Book of Martyrs—the depths of human cruelty.
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer/Huckleberry Finn—stories
and characters don’t have to be regal, wealthy, handsome, or articulate, just
honest.
Don Quixote—confirmed that being a reader, dreamer,
and a bit odd is okay, even exciting.
Come Nineveh, Come Tyre—the danger of “right”
thinking and “right” causes. Scariest book I ever read.
Animal Farm—dangers not questioning/fighting
demagoguery.
Civil Disobedience—to thine own self be true.
There they are along with a bit about why I love them. The
list is not exhaustive, not by a long way. I’ve read every one of these books
multiple times. While Mr. King and I would disagree on just about every issue
these books bring to life. We do agree that reading is the stuff of which
authors are made. To read well is to write well.
Maranatha
Know Jack #398 I Object!
“A dogmatic belief in objective value is necessary to the very idea of a rule which is not tyranny or an obedience which is not slavery.” ...

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“There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.” Mark Twain Twain’s observation makes me wonder where today’s world is ...